User contributions for Philip
24 April 2024
- 19:5219:52, 24 April 2024 diff hist +14 Glossary:Silicon Carbide No edit summary current
- 19:4619:46, 24 April 2024 diff hist +62 Glossary →Glossary of Terms current
23 April 2024
- 20:5220:52, 23 April 2024 diff hist +37 Glossary:Passkey No edit summary current
- 20:4920:49, 23 April 2024 diff hist 0 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 20:4720:47, 23 April 2024 diff hist +17 Glossary:Parts pairing No edit summary current
- 20:4420:44, 23 April 2024 diff hist +72 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 20:4120:41, 23 April 2024 diff hist +126 Glossary:Two Factor Authentication No edit summary current
- 19:3819:38, 23 April 2024 diff hist +1,167 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 17:4117:41, 23 April 2024 diff hist 0 m Glossary:Recycling Philip moved page Glossary:Recycle to Glossary:Recycling without leaving a redirect current
- 17:4017:40, 23 April 2024 diff hist 0 m Glossary:Upcycling Philip moved page Glossary:Upcycle to Glossary:Upcycling without leaving a redirect current
- 17:2617:26, 23 April 2024 diff hist +332 N Glossary:RoHS Created page with "The Restriction of Hazardous Substances or RoHS directive (sometimes known as the "lead-free directive") restricts the use of 10 hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment. These include lead, mercury, cadmium and hexavalent chromium, together with a further six organic chemicals. It took effect in the EU in 2006." current
- 17:1517:15, 23 April 2024 diff hist +352 N Glossary:WEEE Created page with "The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment or WEEE Directive obligates producers and distributors of electrical equipment placed on the market after 2005 to make provision for its end of life collection and recycling. It is applicable in the UK and the EU. It has been criticised for its disregard for reuse or repair as a means of reducing e-waste." current
- 17:0217:02, 23 April 2024 diff hist +308 N Glossary:Soak test Created page with "A soak test is an extended test of a device following manufacture or repair, with the aim of shaking out any manufacturing defects or shortcomings in the repair. Sometimes this will be performed at full power or in some other way designed to stress any weak components and precipitate any incipient failures." current
- 16:5516:55, 23 April 2024 diff hist +441 N Glossary:Bathtub curve Created page with "Reliability studies in many fields tend to show a common pattern for failures. Manufacturing defects are the principal cause of early life failures, but once these have all been shaken out the failure rate remains fairly low through the expected lifetime of a device. The failure rate then starts to climb as components begin to wear out. So plotting the failure rate against time gives a U-shaped curve, commonly known as the bathtub curve." current
- 15:2915:29, 23 April 2024 diff hist +172 N Glossary:Conflict Materials Created page with "Conflict materials are raw materials largely sourced from conflict regions, where their supply is likely to be used for the purchase of arms or the support of armed groups." current
- 15:2615:26, 23 April 2024 diff hist +247 N Glossary:Critical Raw Materials Created page with "CRM or Critical Raw Materials are those raw materials in critically short supply. This may be because there simply isn't much of them waiting to be mined, or because what there is is largely controlled by unfriendly or potentially hostile nations." current
- 15:2015:20, 23 April 2024 diff hist +168 N Glossary:Upcycling Created page with "Upcycling is the practice of taking disused or faulty items or their major components and reusing them in a different way, hence saving them from recycling or landfill."
- 15:1515:15, 23 April 2024 diff hist +298 N Glossary:Refurbishment Created page with "Reurbishment is the practice of taking used items and giving them a new lease of life by replacing worn or damaged parts, bringing them up to date with a fresh software installation and perhaps replacing a slow hard drive with a much faster SSD." current
- 15:0415:04, 23 April 2024 diff hist +241 N Glossary:Remanufacture Created page with "Remanufacture is the practice of creating good-as-new products using some proportion of pre-used parts. Common examples are ink and toner cartridges and laptop batteries, could equally include a laptop given a new case, keyboard and battery." current
- 14:5914:59, 23 April 2024 diff hist +379 N Glossary:Recycling Created page with "Recycling is the practice of recovering raw materials from waste items. This is generally inefficient and often impracticable or uneconomic for valuable materials used in small quantities. Furtthermore the resultant raw materials may not be of sufficient quality for demanding applications. Hence it is regarded as the second-worst option, ahead only of landfill or incineration."
- 14:5014:50, 23 April 2024 diff hist +248 N Glossary:Circular economy Created page with "A circular economy is one where a minimum of items or their parts are sent for landfill or incineration, and a high proportion are either reused, repaired or recycled, so minimising the consumption of raw materials and the pre-use carbon footprint." current
- 14:4514:45, 23 April 2024 diff hist +201 N Glossary:Repair Created page with "Repair is the second option (after reuse) in a circular economy. It has been shown that many devices sent for recycling could actually be repaired relatively easily and hence given a new lease of life." current
- 14:4214:42, 23 April 2024 diff hist +225 N Glossary:Reuse Created page with "Reuse is the preferred option in a circular economy. Many items are discarded because they have been replaced by a newer model, or simply fallen into disuse, but could be given a second life if sold or donated to a new owner." current
- 14:3614:36, 23 April 2024 diff hist +166 N Glossary:E-Waste Created page with "e-Waste is all those electrical and electronic goods discarded by their owner, whether because they are faulty, no longer needed, or simply replaced by a newer model." current
20 April 2024
- 20:5520:55, 20 April 2024 diff hist +779 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 20:1420:14, 20 April 2024 diff hist +447 N Glossary:Gallium Created page with "Gallium is a soft metal similar to aluminium but with a low melting point. In electronics, many compounds of gallium are semiconductors with useful properties. Gallium arsenide devices are able to operate at much higher frequencies than their silicon counterparts and so are widely used in mobile phones and satellite comunications. Various other gallium compounds are used in practically all visible and infra-red LEDs." current
- 19:4819:48, 20 April 2024 diff hist +440 N Glossary:Silicon Carbide Created page with "Silicon carbide (as carborundum) has long been used as an abrasive, but it is also a semiconductor with useful properties for high power applications. In recent years silicon carbide devices such as MOSFETs having higher voltage and power ratings than equivalent silicon devices have been increasingly used in applications such as EVs and power conversion."
- 19:2819:28, 20 April 2024 diff hist +9 Glossary:COM port No edit summary current
- 19:2719:27, 20 April 2024 diff hist 0 m Glossary:D-subminiature Philip moved page Glossary:D-sub to Glossary:D-subminiature without leaving a redirect current
- 19:2619:26, 20 April 2024 diff hist +9 Glossary:RS-232 No edit summary current
- 17:1517:15, 20 April 2024 diff hist +237 N Glossary:Duplex Created page with "A duplex comunication channel is one that supports communication in both directions. A half-duplex channel only allows communication in one direction at a time whereas full duplex allows for simultaneous communication in both directions." current
- 17:1317:13, 20 April 2024 diff hist 0 Glossary:Simplex No edit summary current
- 17:1217:12, 20 April 2024 diff hist +181 N Glossary:Simplex Created page with "A simplex comminication channel is one that allows for commuication in one direction only, in conttrat to a duplex connection which supports 2-way communication."
- 17:0817:08, 20 April 2024 diff hist −4 Glossary:RS-232 No edit summary
- 17:0617:06, 20 April 2024 diff hist +390 N Glossary:COM port Created page with "A COM port is a serial interface port using a DB-9 connector, offered by virtally all home and personal computers before the advent of USB. Modern computers often still offer simulated COM ports over USB connections for interfacing to simple devices requiring only to be able to exchange a stream of bytes."
- 17:0017:00, 20 April 2024 diff hist +438 N Glossary:D-subminiature Created page with "D-subminiature connectors are a series of electrical connectors characterised by their D-shaped shell. Whilst there are numerous variants, just a few are or have been in common use. DB-9 (more correctly DE-9) and DB-25 were ubiqitus on home and personal computers as the serial (COM) and paralel ports before being displaced by USB, and DE-15 is still used for VGA video connectors."
- 16:3716:37, 20 April 2024 diff hist +42 Glossary:RS-232 No edit summary
- 16:3516:35, 20 April 2024 diff hist +393 N Glossary:DTE, DCE Created page with "DTE or Data Terminal Equipment and DCE or Data Communications Equipment are the names given to the two ends of an RS-232 data connection. These were originally assumed to be a computer or computer terminal and a modem respectively but the DCE is now more commonly a computer and the DTE a device or computer controlling it through a command line interface." current
- 16:2416:24, 20 April 2024 diff hist +611 N Glossary:RS-232 Created page with "RS-232 is an old standard originally conceived for communication between a modem and a computer or computer terminal, normally using DB-9 or DB-25 connectors. It was embodied in the COM ports that were once a feature of virtually all personal and home computers. Although now superseded by USB, due to its great simplicity and former ubiquity it is still used where low speed communication is r..."
- 09:1209:12, 20 April 2024 diff hist +98 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 09:1009:10, 20 April 2024 diff hist +488 N Glossary:Digital Certificate Created page with "A digital certificate is a piece of data which declares an association between an identity (e.g. the owner of a website or email address, or a software publisher) and a public key. Anyone can then use the public key to verify a digital signature applied to any piece of data by the identity. The certificate is normally itself digitally signed by a chain of more authoritative identities, ending in a well known root certificate which eve..." current
19 April 2024
- 21:5421:54, 19 April 2024 diff hist +110 Glossary:X.509 No edit summary current
- 21:3021:30, 19 April 2024 diff hist +53 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 21:1921:19, 19 April 2024 diff hist +122 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 15:0615:06, 19 April 2024 diff hist +88 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
11 April 2024
- 09:2009:20, 11 April 2024 diff hist +324 Glossary →Glossary of Terms
- 09:1909:19, 11 April 2024 diff hist 0 m Glossary:Reverse defenestration No edit summary current Tag: Visual edit
- 09:1709:17, 11 April 2024 diff hist +45 N Glosary:Reverse defenestration Philip moved page Glosary:Reverse defenestration to Glossary:Reverse defenestration current Tag: New redirect
- 09:1709:17, 11 April 2024 diff hist 0 m Glossary:Reverse defenestration Philip moved page Glosary:Reverse defenestration to Glossary:Reverse defenestration
- 09:0909:09, 11 April 2024 diff hist +477 N Glossary:Hypervisor Created page with "A hypervisor is a program which allows you to run one or more virtual machines, each in its own padded cell and hence prevented from interfering with one another or with the hypervisor itself. A hypervisor may run as an application under a host operating system, or may run on the "bare metal" without an operating system, and hence free to utilise the totality of available computing, memory and peripheral resources." current